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Regiment marks Remembrance Day in Hamilton

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Governor George Fergusson, the Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Bermuda Regiment, lays a poppy wreath at the Cenotaph on Hamilton’s Front Street (Photograph supplied)

The City of Hamilton today came to a standstill as the annual Remembrance Day parade marked two minutes’ silence to honour the fallen.

Veterans joined serving Royal Bermuda Regiment (RBR) soldiers and police on parade at the Cenotaph on Front Street, while hundreds looked on.

Allan Kuhn, 94, who served in the Second World War with the Canadian Army’s Grenadier Guards, paraded with other former soldiers as dignitaries, led by Governor George Fergusson, laid wreaths at the memorial.

Mr Kuhn said: “It’s very important to be here. It’s very emotional. You get a lot of young people too and that’s important.”

Anglican Canon Thomas Nisbett, 90, who served in the Bermuda Militia Infantry guarding military installations on the Island in the Second World War, added: “I never miss it.

“I really look forward to it, especially in remembrance of those I knew in these days who are not with us any more. I feel proud of the fact I can march in their honour.”

Vernon Clarke, a former regular soldier in the British Army’s Royal Engineers, who served in Europe at the height of the Cold War and did two tours of troubled Northern Ireland, said: “It’s vital to remember.

“When I was serving in Germany we went to some of the battlefields and I saw the graves. As far as the eye can see it was just graves.

“It’s one thing hearing a number on some TV programme — but to see crosses covering an entire hillside for miles is something else.”

Chip Waters, a former Colonel in the United States Army Rangers and a paratrooper, added: “I come every year.

Col Waters, 65, from Southampton, who served in the then-Bermuda Cadet Corps as a schoolboy in the 1960s, added: “Bermudians have made a difference in the world and it’s important to recognise that fact, whether it’s now or in the past.

“Bermudians have fought in all the world wars and every war that’s been since and a lot have been on peacekeeping operations in various places.”

Col Waters said: “The Regiment has a proud history — the Bermuda Rifles and the Bermuda Militia Artillery had battle honours from both world wars and the Regiment is important to Bermuda.

“Help is a long way away, so our help is from our own. That’s particularly important during things like hurricanes.”

Governor George Fergusson, who led the wreath-laying ceremony, said: “It was an impressive turnout and very good as always to see the veterans. Sadly, one or two I got to know are not here from previous years.

“It was an excellent ceremony and respectfully and movingly carried out.”

Michael Dunkley, the Premier, added: “You can never forget the service and the sacrifice of those who came before us. Pretty much the whole Cabinet was out and the streets were full, even with the bad weather. That to me sends a message that people will never forget.”

Regiment Commanding Officer Lieutenant Colonel Michael Foster-Brown said: “It’s always a special and moving event in the calendar. It’s a chance to honour the service of those who gave so much.

“It’s especially good as it’s the Regiment’s 50th anniversary and also the 100th anniversary of the start of the First World War having been so recent. It was extra special.”

Veterans parade at the Cenotaph to mark Remembrance Day (Photograph supplied)
Proud veterans stand to attention on Front Street as wreaths are laid at the Cenotaph to remember those who served (Photograph supplied)